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Baseball writers, fans, and others react to Red Sox firing Alex Cora

Boston Red Sox

“This is a typical Red Sox move. They are known for scapegoating.”

Alex Cora and several members of his staff were let go on Saturday evening. (Photo by: Barry Chin/Globe Staff).

By Conor Ryan

updated on April 26, 2026 | 1:46 PM

7 minutes to read

The Red Sox are cleaning house in the midst of a disheartening start to the 2026 season, with Boston firing manager Alex Cora and five of his coaches on Saturday evening.

Even with Boston’s disappointing 10-17 record to open the new season, the Red Sox’ decision to overhaul a significant portion of its coaching staff before the calendar flips to May still stands as a seismic shakeup — especially for a manager who won a World Series title with Boston in 2018.

Here’s a look at some noteworthy reactions from several baseball writers, fans, celebrities, and others to the Red Sox’ stunning move.

Ken Rosenthal

Fox Sports and The Athletic baseball writer/broadcaster Ken Rosenthal gave his take on the Red Sox’ decision to fire Cora during Fox’s broadcast of Saturday’s Dodgers-Cubs game. 

“This was an absolute shocker. Cora was in the second year of a three-year, $21.75 million contract, so he’s almost owed two-thirds of that.  … Now the Red Sox. This is a typical Red Sox move,” Rosenthal said. “They are known for scapegoating. But this one was shocking because of the contractual situation and because other managers seemingly are in more trouble. 

“One of those managers is the Phillies’ Rob Thomson. [The] Phillies have lost 10 in a row. And keep in mind, guys. Dave Dombrowski, Phillies president of baseball operations, is very close with Alex Cora from their time together with the Red Sox. I can’t imagine Cora taking over the Phillies next week, but that’s going to be speculated on as we go along here.”

Rosenthal didn’t hold back when asked about the Red Sox in a column posted on Sunday:

“It’s an endless game of survivor at Fenway Park, only no one ever survives. Not top executives. Not superstars like Mookie Betts, Rafael Devers and Alex Bregman. Not managers like Terry Francona, John Farrell and now Alex Cora after the team’s 10-17 start,” Rosenthal wrote.

Jeff Passan

ESPN baseball writer Jeff Passan — who broke the Cora news just before 7 p.m. on Saturday night — elaborated more on the Red Sox’s decision on SportsCenter later that night.

“I think it was a culmination of things. And look, there has been some disconnect between the manager Alex Cora and the front office led by chief baseball officer Craig Breslow, and that’s manifested itself in this 10-17 start.

The Red Sox have not looked good, and coming into this season, projections — internally, as well as externally from other teams — had them as a postseason team. And so if there is going to be blame to go around, it is going to be trained on the manager. And yet, unlike places like the New York Mets, the Philadelphia Phillies, even the Houston Astros, where there have been questions about whether they’re going to be new managers, the Red Sox were decisive in this situation.”

As far as why the Red Sox made this move so early in the season, Passan said that Boston’s top brass believes “the season can still be salvaged at this point.”

Trevor Story

Red Sox shortstop Trevor Story doesn’t seem thrilled with Boston’s decision to gut most of its coaching staff.

Trevor Story is not happy with the decisions and says he wants to clear the air with Craig Breslow today. Says “some of the best coaches in the world didn’t get a fair shot.”

— Chris Cotillo (@ChrisCotillo) April 26, 2026

Garrett Whitlock

Another Red Sox veteran in Garrett Whitlock didn’t mince words when asked about the message from Boston’s top brass on Sunday morning.

Players were not invited to ask the bosses questions about Alex Cora’s firing and the situation.

“They made it very clear that we get paid to play baseball and we need to just focus on playing baseball,” Whitlock said. https://t.co/bZxiA6MRjl

— Tim Healey (@timbhealey) April 26, 2026

Roman Anthony

Anthony, who played for new Red Sox manager Chad Tracy in Triple-A Worcester, gave his take on Boston’s managerial switch.

“Trace is tremendous at what he does, we know that he’s going to have our back. Trace is going to be great.”

Buster Olney

ESPN MLB writer Buster Olney was quick to note that Boston’s coaching overhaul means that Boston is “unequivocally Craig Breslow’s organization” moving forward. 

Alex Cora fired less than halfway into a three-year, $21.75 million deal he negotiated in the summer of 2024. Jason Varitek dumped in April, in his 30th year affiliated with the Red Sox. Other coaches let go. This is unequivocally Craig Breslow’s organization.

— Buster Olney (@Buster_ESPN) April 25, 2026

Speaking to a “rival evaluator”, Olney echoed some skepticism about the Red Sox’ odds of pulling themselves out of this early-season tailspin. 

Re: Red Sox, rival evaluator: “How does it make it better to fire one of the best managers in the game?”

— Buster Olney (@Buster_ESPN) April 25, 2026

Olney elaborated on the Red Sox’s decision on Sunday morning.

This is a full flex by Craig Breslow, head of baseball operations for the Red Sox. He didn’t hire Cora, and now he is firing him. In the long and storied Red Sox “Game of Thrones” in owner John Henry’s tenure, Breslow comes out on top; this is his organization, unequivocally,” Olney wrote.

Bob Nightengale

USA Today baseball writer Bob Nightengale was quick to connect the dots between Cora and the Phillies — who are currently scuffling in the NL East. Nightengale acknowledged that Cora still has a close relationship with current Phillies exec — and former Red Sox president of baseball operations — Dave Dombrowski. 

Alex Cora will now be the hottest commodity for the next managerial vacancy, and it’s no secret that he has a close relationship with Phillies president Dave Dombrowski

— Bob Nightengale (@BNightengale) April 25, 2026

Alex Cora was not even halfway through his 3-year, $21.75 million contract.
He will be managing again within a week if he chooses.

— Bob Nightengale (@BNightengale) April 25, 2026

Erik Boland

Newsday Yankees beat reporter Erik Boland believes that Cora is held in much higher regard across MLB than Craig Breslow — who remains in place as Boston’s chief baseball officer. 

Don’t cover the Red Sox (obviously) but can say this with 100 % certainty when it comes to the industry: Alex Cora is, overwhelmingly, considered far better at his job than Craig Breslow is at his. And it’s not remotely close.

— Erik Boland (@eboland11) April 25, 2026

Stephen King

Legendary horror writer — and ardent Red Sox fan — Stephen King didn’t hold back about the state of the Red Sox after Cora’s firing. 

Instead of firing Alex Cora, the Red Sox might consider firing the team.

— Stephen King (@StephenKing) April 26, 2026

Bill Simmons

Longtime Boston sports scribe and The Ringer founder Bill Simmons believed that Cora made his thoughts about Boston’s roster construction abundantly clear in his final days as Red Sox manager.

I mean… Cora just batted Monasterio 5th against the Yanks as an unofficial protest for how bad this roster is. I cannot say I’m shocked. https://t.co/5QqrgFeUPC

— Bill Simmons (@BillSimmons) April 26, 2026

John Henry

As part of the Red Sox’ announcement on Cora’s firing, Red Sox principal owner John Henry released a statement about Cora’s eight-season run with Boston.

“Alex Cora led this organization to one of the greatest seasons in Red Sox history in 2018, and for that, and the many years that followed, he will always have our deepest gratitude,” Henry said. “He has had a lasting impact on this team and on this city. He has led on and off the field in so many important ways. These decisions are never easy, but this one is especially difficult given what Alex has meant to the Red Sox since the day he arrived.

“I want to thank Alex, our coaches, and their families for everything they have given to this organization. They have been part of this club in a way that goes beyond the field, and they will always have our respect and gratitude.”

Kevin Pillar

Former Red Sox outfielder Kevin Pillar — who played 30 games with the club in 2020 — didn’t mince words about Breslow’s standing in Boston’s organization, sharing that he believes Boston let the wrong person go. 

Nick Sogard

Speaking to Tommy Cassell of the Worcester Telegram & Gazette, WooSox infielder Nick Sogard shared his thoughts on Worcester manager Chad Tracy getting named as interim manager.

“I think everyone felt like it was something that would absolutely happen at some point. Obviously, crazy circumstances. He addressed us, was super professional as always (and) acknowledged that he is bummed that a lot of his really close friends just lost their jobs. 

“(I’m) super excited for him, he deserves it. He’s ready. He’s someone that I’ve grown really close with, obviously, over the years here. So I’m just really happy that he’s getting what we all feel like he deserves.”

Tony Massarotti

Former Red Sox writer and current 98.5 The Sports Hub radio host Tony Massarotti wondered if Cora’s comments after Boston’s 17-1 win over the Orioles might have sealed his fate.

Aaron Boone

Yankees manager Aaron Boone was asked on Saturday night about Cora’s firing — acknowledging that he was “very shocked” to hear the news of Cora’s exit.

Aaron Boone said he was “very shocked” to learn about Alex Cora’s firing and the #RedSox shakeup.

Regarding Cora, Boone said, “I have a feeling he’ll do whatever he wants. He’s a great manager, a smart, talented person that I’m sure will have a lot of opportunities available to…

— Gary Phillips (@GaryHPhillips) April 26, 2026

Section 10 Hosts

Jared Carrabis and the fellow hosts of the popular “Section 10” Red Sox podcast were among the many who were shocked by Cora’s ouster. 

Truly stunned that Alex Cora is out as the manager of the Boston Red Sox. He ends up 3rd all-time in wins for Sox managers with 620. Never thought this would happen right now. Obviously the team has massively underperformed, but certainly didn’t see this coming in April.

— Steve Perrault (@Steve_Perrault) April 25, 2026

Salute to Cora. 2018 was, in the words of Wilyer Abreu, the best experience I ever had.

— Céad Míle Fáilte (@ColeyMick) April 25, 2026

Alex Cora fired before Aaron Boone. Who would’ve ever thought.

— Tyler Milliken (@tylermilliken_) April 25, 2026

By the way, I’ve been on record as a major Chad Tracy guy. Even talked about on radio last week why I think he’d be the first guy given a chance. Never understood the people who thought Varitek was next up. The org made it obvious that he was never in those talks. https://t.co/Q20tCpnVlt

— Tyler Milliken (@tylermilliken_) April 26, 2026

Lou Merloni

Alanna Rizzo

Alex Cora will only be unemployed as long as he wants to be. This isn’t a Cora problem.

— AlaNNa Rizzo (@alannarizzo) April 25, 2026

Ma’am, Cora will be employed tomorrow if he wants. This is a roster construction problem.

— AlaNNa Rizzo (@alannarizzo) April 25, 2026

Tom Caron

Joon Lee

Nick “Fitzy” Stevens

Nick “Fitzy” Stevens — who was recently let go from WEEI’s afternoon drive program last week — gave his take on Cora’s firing. 

Geez, little did I realize Alex Cora and I would have more in common this week than just a love of baseball

— FitzyGFY 🍺 (brew checkmark) (@FitzyGFY) April 26, 2026

Michael Hurley 

Alex Cora

In a text to WEEI’s Rob Bradford, the former Red Sox manager kept things brief about his exit from Boston.

“I’m happy,” he told Bradford.

Alex Cora just texted: ‘I’m happy’

— Rob Bradford (@bradfo) April 26, 2026

Cora later posted a photo on his Instagram account of himself and the coaches that were let go on Tuesday as they took a flight out of Baltimore. Jason Varitek delivered a thumbs-down as part of the photo.

Early Sunday morning, Cora also reposted a video on Instagram of Mookie Betts — traded by Boston in 2020 — reflecting on Alex Cora’s impact on him.

Dallas Braden

Alex Cora is a great baseball man. Managing in MLB is more than managing the players. It’s about managing relationships. Sometimes when the executive landscape & Org. Process changes-that job changes. It’s the nature of the business part of this game. Any team would be lucky to…

— Dallas Braden (@DALLASBRADEN209) April 26, 2026

Jahmai Webster

Shock. The operative term in the Red Sox clubhouse to describe the feeling in here this morning. We’ve been told ownership, and Craig spoke briefly in here this morning. Shared with the players to focus on baseball and their jobs on the field.

— Jahmai Webster (@WebsterOnTV) April 26, 2026

Zack Scott

The Red Sox have been chasing objective decision-making since around 2017.

The drama hasn’t dropped. Neither has the second-guessing.

Process doesn’t kill emotion. It just relocates it.

Some high-impact people lost their jobs today. Now, the bullseye gets moved to other backs. https://t.co/Nps9zHlPox

— Zack Scott (@ZackScottSports) April 26, 2026

Catherine Varitek

Red Sox Nation,
Thank you. For the love, support, and loyalty you’ve shown to my husband for the past 3 decades. Forever grateful ❤️

— Catherine Varitek (@CatherinVaritek) April 26, 2026

 

Conor Ryan is a staff writer covering the Bruins, Celtics, Patriots, and Red Sox for Boston.com, a role he has held since 2023.

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